23 results on '"Mulder, Marijn"'
Search Results
2. Is Continuous Intraoperative Monitoring of Mean Arterial Pressure as Good as the Hypotension Prediction Index Algorithm?: Research Letter
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Mulder, Marijn P., Harmannij-Markusse, Mirjam, Donker, Dirk W., Fresiello, Libera, and Potters, Jan-Willem
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- 2023
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3. Can telerehabilitation services combined with caregiver-mediated exercises improve early supported discharge services poststroke? A study protocol for a multicentre, observer-blinded, randomized controlled trial
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Mulder, Marijn, Nikamp, Corien, Nijland, Rinske, van Wegen, Erwin, Prinsen, Erik, Vloothuis, Judith, Buurke, Jaap, and Kwakkel, Gert
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- 2022
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4. Arterial pulse wave modeling and analysis for vascular-age studies: a review from VascAgeNet
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Alastruey, Jordi, Charlton, Peter H, Bikia, Vasiliki, Paliakaite, Birute, Hametner, Bernhard, Bruno, Rosa Maria, Mulder, Marijn P, Vennin, Samuel, Piskin, Senol, Khir, Ashraf W, Guala, Andrea, Mayer, Christopher C, Mynard, Jonathan, Hughes, Alun D, Segers, Patrick, Westerhof, Berend E, Institut Català de la Salut, [Alastruey J] Department of Biomedical Engineering, School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King’s College London, London, United Kingdom. [Charlton PH] Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom. [Bikia V] Division of Vascular Surgery, School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States. Laboratory of Hemodynamics and Cardiovascular Technology, Institute of Bioengineering, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne, Switzerland. [Paliakaite B] Biomedical Engineering Institute, Kaunas University of Technology, Kaunas, Lithuania. [Hametner B] AIT Austrian Institute of Technology, Center for Health and Bioresources, Medical Signal Analysis, Vienna, Austria. [Bruno RM] INSERM, U970, Paris Cardiovascular Research Center, Universite de Paris, Hopital Europeen Georges Pompidou – APHP, Paris, France. [Guala A] Vall d’Hebron Institut de Recerca (VHIR), Barcelona, Spain. CIBER-CV, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain, Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus, and American physiological society
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Otros calificadores::/fisiología [Otros calificadores] ,Physiology ,Other subheadings::/physiology [Other subheadings] ,técnicas de investigación::modelos teóricos::modelos biológicos::modelos cardiovasculares [TÉCNICAS Y EQUIPOS ANALÍTICOS, DIAGNÓSTICOS Y TERAPÉUTICOS] ,pulse wave ,Diagnosis::Diagnostic Techniques and Procedures::Diagnostic Techniques, Cardiovascular::Plethysmography::Photoplethysmography [ANALYTICAL, DIAGNOSTIC AND THERAPEUTIC TECHNIQUES, AND EQUIPMENT] ,hemodynamics ,Sistema cardiovascular - Envelliment ,central pressure augmentation ,diagnóstico::técnicas y procedimientos diagnósticos::técnicas diagnósticas cardiovasculares::análisis de la onda del pulso [TÉCNICAS Y EQUIPOS ANALÍTICOS, DIAGNÓSTICOS Y TERAPÉUTICOS] ,diagnóstico::técnicas y procedimientos diagnósticos::técnicas diagnósticas cardiovasculares::pletismografía::fotopletismografía [TÉCNICAS Y EQUIPOS ANALÍTICOS, DIAGNÓSTICOS Y TERAPÉUTICOS] ,Physiology (medical) ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,ankle-brachial index ,heart-rate ,sistema cardiovascular::vasos sanguíneos::arterias [ANATOMÍA] ,haemodynamics ,arteriosclerosis ,Artèries ,cardiovascular risk-factors ,aging ,Diagnosis::Diagnostic Techniques and Procedures::Diagnostic Techniques, Cardiovascular::Pulse Wave Analysis [ANALYTICAL, DIAGNOSTIC AND THERAPEUTIC TECHNIQUES, AND EQUIPMENT] ,one-dimensional model ,Pletismografia ,ageing ,left-ventricular afterload ,Investigative Techniques::Models, Theoretical::Models, Biological::Models, Cardiovascular [ANALYTICAL, DIAGNOSTIC AND THERAPEUTIC TECHNIQUES, AND EQUIPMENT] ,Cardiovascular System::Blood Vessels::Arteries [ANATOMY] ,aortic input impedance ,Sistema cardiovascular - Malalties - Diagnòstic ,atherosclerosis ,in-vivo validation ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,central blood-pressure ,mathematical-model - Abstract
Aging; Arteriosclerosis; Hemodynamics Envelliment; Arteriosclerosi; Hemodinàmica Envejecimiento; Arteriosclerosis; Hemodinámica Arterial pulse waves (PWs) such as blood pressure and photoplethysmogram (PPG) signals contain a wealth of information on the cardiovascular (CV) system that can be exploited to assess vascular age and identify individuals at elevated CV risk. We review the possibilities, limitations, complementarity, and differences of reduced-order, biophysical models of arterial PW propagation, as well as theoretical and empirical methods for analyzing PW signals and extracting clinically relevant information for vascular age assessment. We provide detailed mathematical derivations of these models and theoretical methods, showing how they are related to each other. Finally, we outline directions for future research to realize the potential of modeling and analysis of PW signals for accurate assessment of vascular age in both the clinic and in daily life. This article is based upon work from COST Action “Network for Research in Vascular Ageing” (VascAgeNet, CA18216), supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology, www.cost.eu). This work was supported by British Heart Foundation Grants PG/15/104/31913 (to J.A. and P.H.C.), FS/20/20/34626 (to P.H.C.), and AA/18/6/34223, PG/17/90/33415, SPG 2822621, and SP/F/21/150020 (to A.D.H.); Kaunas University of Technology Grant INP2022/16 (to B.P.); European Research Executive Agency, Marie-Sklodowska Curie Actions Individual Fellowship Grant 101038096 (to S.P.); Istinye University, BAP Project Grant 2019B1 (to S.P.); “la Caixa” Foundation Grant LCF/BQ/PR22/11920008 (to A.G.); and National Institute for Health and Care Research Grant AI AWARD02499 and EU Horizon 2020 Grant H2020 848109 (to A.D.H.).
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- 2023
5. Incidence, Severity and Clinical Factors Associated with Hypotension in Patients Admitted to an Intensive Care Unit: A Prospective Observational Study.
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Terwindt, Lotte E., Schuurmans, Jaap, van der Ster, Björn J. P., Wensing, Carin A. G. C. L., Mulder, Marijn P., Wijnberge, Marije, Cherpanath, Thomas G. V., Lagrand, Wim K., Karlas, Alain A., Verlinde, Mark H., Hollmann, Markus W., Geerts, Bart F., Veelo, Denise P., and Vlaar, Alexander P. J.
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INTENSIVE care patients ,HYPOTENSION ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: The majority of patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) experience severe hypotension which is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. At present, prospective studies examining the incidence and severity of hypotension using continuous waveforms are missing. Methods: This study is a prospective observational cohort study in a mixed surgical and non-surgical ICU population. All patients over 18 years were included and continuous arterial pressure waveforms data were collected. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) below 65 mmHg for at least 10 s was defined as hypotension and a MAP below 45 mmHg as severe hypotension. The primary outcome was the incidence of hypotension. Secondary outcomes were the severity of hypotension expressed in time-weighted average (TWA), factors associated with hypotension, the number and duration of hypotensive events. Results: 499 patients were included. The incidence of hypotension (MAP < 65 mmHg) was 75% (376 out of 499) and 9% (46 out of 499) experienced severe hypotension. Median TWA was 0.3 mmHg [0–1.0]. Associated clinical factors were age, male sex, BMI and cardiogenic shock. There were 5 (1–12) events per patients with a median of 52 min (5–170). Conclusions: In a mixed surgical and non-surgical ICU population the incidence of hypotension is remarkably high. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Allied rehabilitation using caregiver-mediated exercises combined with telerehabilitation for stroke (ARMed4Stroke): A randomised controlled trial.
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Mulder, Marijn, Nikamp, Corien DM, Prinsen, Erik C, Nijland, Rinske HM, van Dorp, Matthijs, Buurke, Jaap, Kwakkel, Gert, and van Wegen, Erwin EH
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STROKE rehabilitation , *CAREGIVERS , *STROKE , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *REHABILITATION centers - Abstract
To assess the added value of caregiver-mediated exercises combined with telerehabilitation in addition to usual care compared to usual care alone on the self-reported mobility outcome after subacute stroke.Multicentre, observer-blinded, parallel randomised controlled trial. An off-site researcher allocated treatments using minimisation.Four rehabilitation centres in the Netherlands.Forty-one patient–caregiver dyads within 3 months poststroke.Eight-week blended care program with caregiver-mediated mobility exercises for 2.5 h per week supported by telerehabilitation and four face-to-face sessions in addition to usual care.Self-reported mobility domain of the Stroke Impact Scale postintervention. Secondary outcomes were functional outcome, dyads’ psychosocial wellbeing, care transition to the community postintervention and after 6 months.Forty-one dyads (21 intervention, 20 control) were randomised, and 37 (N = 18; N = 19) were analysed following intention-to-treat. The Stroke Impact Scale mobility was not significantly different between groups postintervention (B 0.8, 95% CI –6.8–8.5,
p = 0.826). The secondary outcomes, namely, (a) caregivers’ quality of life postintervention (p = 0.013), (b) caregivers’ symptoms of depression postintervention (p = 0.025), and (c) independence in leisurely activities at 6 months (p = 0.024), showed significant benefits in favour of caregiver-mediated exercises with telerehabilitation. A significant difference favouring controls was found in self-reported muscle strength at 6 months (p = 0.002).Caregiver-mediated exercises combined with telerehabilitation yielded no differential effect on our primary outcome self-reported mobility. Although the trial is underpowered, current findings are in line with previous trials. Future studies should further explore beneficial effects of caregiver involvement in stroke rehabilitation targeting psychosocial wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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7. Distinct morphologies of arterial waveforms reveal preload‐, contractility‐, and afterload‐deficient hemodynamic instability: An in silico simulation study.
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Mulder, Marijn P., Broomé, Michael, Donker, Dirk W., and Westerhof, Berend E.
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HEMODYNAMICS , *BLOOD volume , *PRINCIPAL components analysis , *VASCULAR resistance , *BLOOD pressure - Abstract
Hemodynamic instability is frequently present in critically ill patients, primarily caused by a decreased preload, contractility, and/or afterload. We hypothesized that peripheral arterial blood pressure waveforms allow to differentiate between these underlying causes. In this in‐silico experimental study, a computational cardiovascular model was used to simulate hemodynamic instability by decreasing blood volume, left ventricular contractility or systemic vascular resistance, and additionally adaptive and compensatory mechanisms. From the arterial pressure waveforms, 45 features describing the morphology were discerned and a sensitivity analysis and principal component analysis were performed, to quantitatively investigate their discriminative power. During hemodynamic instability, the arterial waveform morphology changed distinctively, for example, the slope of the systolic upstroke having a sensitivity of 2.02 for reduced preload, 0.80 for reduced contractility, and −0.02 for reduced afterload. It was possible to differentiate between the three underlying causes based on the derived features, as demonstrated by the first two principal components explaining 99% of the variance in waveforms. The features with a high correlation coefficient (>0.25) to these principal components are describing the systolic up‐ and downstroke, and the anacrotic and dicrotic notches of the waveforms. In this study, characteristic peripheral arterial waveform morphologies were identified that allow differentiation between deficits in preload, contractility, and afterload causing hemodynamic instability. These findings are confined to an in silico simulation and warrant further experimental and clinical research in order to prove clinical usability in daily practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. Comparing two identically protocolized, multicentre, randomized controlled trials on caregiver-mediated exercises poststroke: Any differences across countries?
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Mulder, Marijn, Nijland, Rinske H. M., Vloothuis, Judith D. M., van den Berg, Maayken, Crotty, Maria, Kwakkel, Gert, and van Wegen, Erwin E. H.
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MEDICAL rehabilitation , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *REHABILITATION centers , *STROKE patients , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,WESTERN countries - Abstract
Background: The evidence for rehabilitation interventions poststroke lack sufficient robustness. However, variation in treatment effects across countries have been given little attention. Objective: To compare two identically protocolized trials conducted in different western countries in order to identify factors that may have caused variation in secondary trial outcomes. Methods: Comparative study based on individual patient data (N = 129) from two randomized controlled trials, conducted in hospitals and rehabilitation facilities in the Netherlands (N = 66) and Australia (N = 63). Patients with stroke and their caregivers were randomly allocated to an 8-week caregiver-mediated exercises intervention (N = 63; 31 Australian and 32 Dutch) or to a control group (N = 66; 32 Australian and 34 Dutch). Patient characteristics, compliance, usual care and process measures were compared across countries. We examined if study setting significantly moderated the trial outcomes: Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, Fatigue Severity Scale and General Self-Efficacy Scale, measured at 8- and 12 weeks follow-up. In addition, we explored if factors that were significantly different across countries caused variation in these trial outcomes. Results: Most patients suffered an ischemic stroke, were in the subacute phase and participated with their partner. Dutch patients were younger (P = 0.005) and had a lower functional status (P = 0.001). Australian patients were recruited earlier poststroke (P<0.001), spent less time in exercise therapy (P<0.001) and had a shorter length of stay (P<0.001). The level of contamination was higher (P = 0.040) among Dutch controls. No effect modification was observed and trial outcomes did not change after controlling for cross-country differences. Conclusions: The present study highlighted important clinical differences across countries whilst using an identical study protocol. The observed differences could result in a different potential for recovery and variation in treatment effects across trials. We argue that we can proceed faster to evaluating interventions within international pragmatic trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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9. Oefenen met een naaste na een beroerte: ervaringen met het CARE4STROKE-programma
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Vloothuis, Judith D. M., Depla, Marja F., Hertogh, Cees M. P. M., Mulder, Marijn, Nijland, Rinske H. M., Kwakkel, Gert, van Wegen, Erwin E. H., General practice, APH - Aging & Later Life, Rehabilitation medicine, Amsterdam Movement Sciences - Restoration and Development, and Amsterdam Neuroscience - Neurovascular Disorders
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- 2019
10. Agreement and differences regarding family functioning between patients with acquired brain injury and their partners.
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Cox, Vincent, Mulder, Marijn, Nijland, Rinske, Schepers, Vera, Van Wegen, Erwin, Van Heugten, Caroline, Kwakkel, Gert, and Visser-Meily, Johanna
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STROKE diagnosis , *BRAIN injuries , *CONFLICT (Psychology) , *STATISTICAL correlation , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PSYCHOLOGY of Spouses , *FAMILY relations , *CAREGIVER attitudes , *CROSS-sectional method , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *MANN Whitney U Test - Abstract
Primary Objective: To investigate the level of agreement and differences regarding the perception of family functioning between patients with acquired brain injury and their partners. Our hypothesis was that patients would report better family functioning than their partners. Research Design: Cross-sectional study Methods and Procedures: Baseline data were used from 77 patient-partner dyads (87.0% stroke) who were participating in the ongoing CARE4Patient and CARE4Carer trials. Family functioning was assessed using the General Functioning subscale of the McMaster Family Assessment Device (FAD-GF). Agreement was assessed with intraclass correlation coefficient, a Bland-Altman plot, percentages absolute agreement and weighted kappa values. Differences were tested with Wilcoxon signed-rank tests. Main Outcomes and Results: Patients and their partners differed in their perception of family functioning. Within-dyad agreement was poor regarding the overall FAD-GF scores with partners reporting significantly poorer family functioning compared to the patients (32.5% versus 18.2%). Agreement regarding the individual items ranged from slight to moderate. Conclusions: Health care professionals should assess family functioning after stroke in both patients and their partners, and any discrepancies should be discussed with both members of the patient-partner dyad. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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11. Effect of a Machine Learning-Derived Early Warning System for Intraoperative Hypotension vs Standard Care on Depth and Duration of Intraoperative Hypotension During Elective Noncardiac Surgery: The HYPE Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Wijnberge, Marije, Geerts, Bart F., Hol, Liselotte, Lemmers, Nikki, Mulder, Marijn P., Berge, Patrick, Schenk, Jimmy, Terwindt, Lotte E., Hollmann, Markus W., Vlaar, Alexander P., and Veelo, Denise P.
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PREVENTION of surgical complications ,ELECTIVE surgery ,RESEARCH ,GENERAL anesthesia ,SPECIALTY hospitals ,TIME ,RESEARCH methodology ,SURGICAL complications ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,HYPOTENSION ,BLOOD pressure measurement - Abstract
Importance: Intraoperative hypotension is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. A machine learning-derived early warning system to predict hypotension shortly before it occurs has been developed and validated.Objective: To test whether the clinical application of the early warning system in combination with a hemodynamic diagnostic guidance and treatment protocol reduces intraoperative hypotension.Design, Setting, and Participants: Preliminary unblinded randomized clinical trial performed in a tertiary center in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, among adult patients scheduled for elective noncardiac surgery under general anesthesia and an indication for continuous invasive blood pressure monitoring, who were enrolled between May 2018 and March 2019. Hypotension was defined as a mean arterial pressure (MAP) below 65 mm Hg for at least 1 minute.Interventions: Patients were randomly assigned to receive either the early warning system (n = 34) or standard care (n = 34), with a goal MAP of at least 65 mm Hg in both groups.Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was time-weighted average of hypotension during surgery, with a unit of measure of millimeters of mercury. This was calculated as the depth of hypotension below a MAP of 65 mm Hg (in millimeters of mercury) × time spent below a MAP of 65 mm Hg (in minutes) divided by total duration of operation (in minutes).Results: Among 68 randomized patients, 60 (88%) completed the trial (median age, 64 [interquartile range {IQR}, 57-70] years; 26 [43%] women). The median length of surgery was 256 minutes (IQR, 213-430 minutes). The median time-weighted average of hypotension was 0.10 mm Hg (IQR, 0.01-0.43 mm Hg) in the intervention group vs 0.44 mm Hg (IQR, 0.23-0.72 mm Hg) in the control group, for a median difference of 0.38 mm Hg (95% CI, 0.14-0.43 mm Hg; P = .001). The median time of hypotension per patient was 8.0 minutes (IQR, 1.33-26.00 minutes) in the intervention group vs 32.7 minutes (IQR, 11.5-59.7 minutes) in the control group, for a median difference of 16.7 minutes (95% CI, 7.7-31.0 minutes; P < .001). In the intervention group, 0 serious adverse events resulting in death occurred vs 2 (7%) in the control group.Conclusions and Relevance: In this single-center preliminary study of patients undergoing elective noncardiac surgery, the use of a machine learning-derived early warning system compared with standard care resulted in less intraoperative hypotension. Further research with larger study populations in diverse settings is needed to understand the effect on additional patient outcomes and to fully assess safety and generalizability.Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03376347. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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12. Prospectively Classifying Community Walkers After Stroke: Who Are They?
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Mulder, Marijn, Nijland, Rinske H., van de Port, Ingrid G., van Wegen, Erwin E., and Kwakkel, Gert
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To classify patients with stroke into subgroups based on their characteristics at the moment of discharge from inpatient rehabilitation in order to predict community ambulation outcome 6 months later. Prospective cohort study with a baseline measurement at discharge from inpatient care and final outcome determined after 6 months. Community. A cohort of patients (N=243) with stroke, referred for outpatient physical therapy, after completing inpatient rehabilitation in The Netherlands. Not applicable. A classification model was developed using Classification And Regression Tree (CART) analysis. Final outcome was determined using the community ambulation questionnaire. Potential baseline predictors included patient demographics, stroke characteristics, use of assistive devices, comfortable gait speed, balance, strength, motivation, falls efficacy, anxiety, and depression. The CART model accurately predicted independent community ambulation in 181 of 193 patients with stroke, based on a comfortable gait speed at discharge of 0.5 meters per second or faster. In contrast, 27 of 50 patients with gait speeds below 0.5 meters per second were correctly predicted to become noncommunity walkers. We show that comfortable gait speed is a key factor in the prognosis of community ambulation outcome. The CART model may support clinicians in organizing community services at the moment of discharge from inpatient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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13. Caregiver-mediated exercises with e-health support for early supported discharge after stroke (CARE4STROKE): A randomized controlled trial.
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Vloothuis, Judith D. M., Mulder, Marijn, Nijland, Rinske H. M., Goedhart, Quirine S., Konijnenbelt, Manin, Mulder, Henry, Hertogh, Cees M. P. M., van Tulder, Maurits, van Wegen, Erwin E. H., and Kwakkel, Gert
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RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *CLINICAL trial registries , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *STROKE , *EXERCISE - Abstract
Background and purpose: We designed an 8-week caregiver-mediated exercise program with e-health support after stroke (CARE4STROKE) in addition to usual care with the aim to improve functional outcome and to facilitate early supported discharge by increasing the intensity of task specific training. Methods: An observer-blinded randomized controlled trial in which 66 stroke patient-caregiver couples were included during inpatient rehabilitation. Patients allocated to the CARE4STROKE program trained an additional amount of 150 minutes a week with a caregiver and were compared to a control group that received usual care alone. Primary outcomes: self-reported mobility domain of the Stroke Impact Scale 3.0 (SIS) and length of stay (LOS). Secondary outcomes: motor impairment, strength, walking ability, balance, mobility and (Extended) Activities of Daily Living of patients, caregiver strain of caregivers, and mood, self-efficacy, fatigue and quality of life of both patients and caregivers. Outcomes were assessed at baseline, 8 and 12 weeks after randomization. Results: No significant between-group differences were found regarding SIS-mobility after 8 (β 6.21, SD 5.16; P = 0.229) and 12 weeks (β 0.14, SD 2.87; P = 0.961), and LOS (P = 0.818). Significant effects in favor of the intervention group were found for patient’s anxiety (β 2.01, SD 0.88; P = 0.023) and caregiver’s depression (β 2.33, SD 0.77; P = 0.003) post intervention. Decreased anxiety in patients remained significant at the 12-week follow-up (β 1.01, SD 0.40; P = 0.009). Conclusions: This proof-of concept trial did not find significant effects on both primary outcomes mobility and LOS as well as the secondary functional outcomes. Treatment contrast in terms of total exercise time may have been insufficient to achieve these effects. However, caregiver-mediated exercises showed a favorable impact on secondary outcome measures of mood for both patient and caregiver. Clinical trial registration: NTR4300, URL– . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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14. Description of the CARE4STROKE programme: A caregiver‐mediated exercises intervention with e‐health support for stroke patients.
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Vloothuis, Judith, de Bruin, Julya, Mulder, Marijn, Nijland, Rinske, Kwakkel, Gert, and van Wegen, Erwin E. H.
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CAREGIVERS ,COMMUNITY health services ,EXERCISE therapy ,TELEMEDICINE ,SOCIAL support ,BODY movement ,HUMAN services programs ,EXERCISE intensity ,STROKE rehabilitation ,STROKE patients ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
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- 2018
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15. Integrated technological and management solutions for wastewater treatment and efficient agricultural reuse in Egypt, Morocco, and Tunisia.
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Frascari, Dario, Zanaroli, Giulio, Motaleb, Mohamed Abdel, Annen, Giorgio, Belguith, Khaoula, Borin, Sara, Choukr‐Allah, Redouane, Gibert, Catherine, Jaouani, Atef, Kalogerakis, Nicolas, Karajeh, Fawzi, Ker Rault, Philippe A., Khadra, Roula, Kyriacou, Stathis, Li, Wen‐Tao, Molle, Bruno, Mulder, Marijn, Oertlé, Emmanuel, and Ortega, Consuelo Varela
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WASTEWATER treatment ,WATER shortages ,WATER efficiency ,CLIMATE change ,WATER quality - Abstract
ABSTRACT: Mediterranean‐African countries (MACs) face a major water crisis. The annual renewable water resources are close to the 500 m
3 /capita threshold of absolute water scarcity, and water withdrawals exceed total renewable water resources by 30%. Such a low water availability curbs economic development in agriculture, which accounts for 86% of freshwater consumption. The analysis of the current situation of wastewater treatment, irrigation, and water management in MACs and of the research projects targeted to these countries indicates the need for 1) an enhanced capacity to analyze water stress, 2) the development of water management strategies capable of including wastewater reuse, and 3) development of locally adapted water treatment and irrigation technologies. This analysis shaped the MADFORWATER project ( www.madforwater.eu), whose goal is to develop a set of integrated technological and management solutions to enhance wastewater treatment, wastewater reuse for irrigation, and water efficiency in agriculture in Egypt, Morocco, and Tunisia. MADFORWATER develops and adapts technologies for the production of irrigation‐quality water from drainage canals and municipal, agro‐industrial, and industrial wastewaters and technologies for water efficiency and reuse in agriculture, initially validated at laboratory scale, to 3 hydrological basins in the selected MACs. Selected technologies will be further adapted and validated in 4 demonstration plants of integrated wastewater treatment and reuse. Integrated strategies for wastewater treatment and reuse targeted to the selected basins are developed, and guidelines for the development of integrated water management strategies in other basins of the 3 target MACs will be produced. The social and technical suitability of the developed technologies and nontechnological tools in relation to the local context is evaluated with the participation of MAC stakeholders and partners. Guidelines on economic instruments and policies for the effective implementation of the proposed water management solutions in the target MACs will be developed. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2018;14:447–462. © 2018 The Authors. Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Society of Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry (SETAC) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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16. Stroke Impact Scale
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Mulder, Marijn and Nijland, Rinske
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- 2016
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17. Caregiver-mediated exercises with e-health support for early supported discharge after stroke (CARE4STROKE): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
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Vloothuis, Judith, Mulder, Marijn, Nijland, Rinske H. M., Konijnenbelt, Manin, Mulder, Henry, Hertogh, Cees M. P. M., van Tulder, Maurits, Kwakkel, Gert, and van Wegen, Erwin
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CAREGIVERS , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *FUNCTIONAL assessment , *EXERCISE therapy , *LENGTH of stay in hospitals , *PHYSICAL therapy , *QUALITY of life , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *DISCHARGE planning , *BLIND experiment , *STROKE rehabilitation - Abstract
Background: Several systematic reviews have shown that additional exercise therapy has a positive effect on functional outcome after stroke. However, there is an urgent need for resource-efficient methods to augment rehabilitation services without increasing health care costs. Asking informal caregivers to do exercises with their loved ones, combined with e-health services may be a cost-effective method to promote early supported discharge with increased functional outcome. The primary aim of the CARE4STROKE study is to evaluate the effects and cost-effectiveness of a caregiver-mediated exercises program combined with e-health services after stroke in terms of self-reported mobility and length of stay.Methods: An observer-blinded randomized controlled trial, in which 66 stroke-patients admitted to a hospital stroke unit, rehabilitation center or nursing home are randomly assigned to either 8 weeks of the CARE4STROKE program in addition to usual care (i.e., experimental group) or 8 weeks of usual care alone (i.e., control group). The CARE4STROKE program is compiled in consultation with a trained physical therapist. A tablet computer is used to present video-based exercises for gait and gait-related activities in which a caregiver acts as an exercise coach. Primary outcomes are the mobility domain of the Stroke Impact Scale and length of stay. Secondary outcomes are the other domains of the Stroke Impact Scale, motor impairment, strength, walking ability, balance, mobility, (Extended) Activities of Daily Living, psychosocial functioning, self-efficacy, fatigue, health-related quality of life of the patient as well as the experienced strain, psychosocial functioning and quality of life of the caregiver. An economic evaluation will be conducted from the societal and health care perspective.Discussion: The main aspects of the CARE4STROKE program are 1) increasing intensity of training by doing exercises with a caregiver in addition to usual care and 2) e-health support. We hypothesize this program leads to better functional outcome and early supported discharge, resulting in reduced costs.Trial Registration: The study is registered in the Dutch trial register as NTR4300, registered 2 December 2013. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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18. No evidence for an association of ocular adnexal lymphoma with Chlamydia psittaci in a cohort of patients from the Netherlands
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Mulder, Marijn M.S., Heddema, Edou R., Pannekoek, Yvonne, Faridpooya, Koorosh, Oud, Monique E.C.M., Schilder-Tol, Esther, Saeed, Peerooz, and Pals, Steven T.
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- 2006
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19. Solutions for Wastewater Treatment and Reuse in North Africa
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Frascari, Dario, Zanaroli, Giulio, Motaleb, Mohamed Abdel, Annen, Giorgio, Belguith, Khaoula, Borin, Sara, Choukr-Allah, Redouane, Gibert, Catherine, Jaouani, Atef, Kalogerakis, Nicolas, Karajeh, Fawzi, Ker Rault, Philippe A, Khadra, Roula, Kyriacou, Stathis, Li, Wen-Tao, Molle, Bruno, Mulder, Marijn, Oertlé, Emmanuel, and Ortega, Consuelo Varela
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20. Commentary.
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Mulder, Marijn and Nijland, Rinske
- Abstract
The author discusses the ability of the Stroke Impact Scale (SIS) Stroke Impact Scale to measure relevant change to patients and limited data are available from a small trial investigating an upper extremity intervention after stroke.
- Published
- 2016
21. Integrated technological and management solutions for wastewater treatment and efficient agricultural reuse in Egypt, Morocco, and Tunisia
- Author
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Dario, Frascari, Giulio, Zanaroli, Mohamed Abdel, Motaleb, Giorgio, Annen, Khaoula, Belguith, Sara, Borin, Redouane, Choukr-Allah, Catherine, Gibert, Atef, Jaouani, Nicolas, Kalogerakis, Fawzi, Karajeh, Philippe A, Ker Rault, Roula, Khadra, Stathis, Kyriacou, Wen-Tao, Li, Bruno, Molle, Marijn, Mulder, Emmanuel, Oertlé, Consuelo Varela, Ortega, Frascari, Dario, Zanaroli, Giulio, Motaleb, Mohamed Abdel, Annen, Giorgio, Belguith, Khaoula, Borin, Sara, Choukr-Allah, Redouane, Gibert, Catherine, Jaouani, Atef, Kalogerakis, Nicola, Karajeh, Fawzi, Ker Rault, Philippe A, Khadra, Roula, Kyriacou, Stathi, Li, Wen-Tao, Molle, Bruno, Mulder, Marijn, Oertlé, Emmanuel, and Ortega, Consuelo Varela
- Subjects
Tunisia ,Water reuse ,Wastewater treatment ,Irrigation ,Integrated water management ,North Africa ,Agriculture ,Waste Disposal, Fluid ,Water Purification ,Morocco ,ING-IND/25 Impianti chimici ,Egypt ,Recycling - Abstract
Summarization: Mediterranean-African countries (MACs) face a major water crisis. The annual renewable water resources are close to the 500 m3/capita threshold of absolute water scarcity, and water withdrawals exceed total renewable water resources by 30%. Such a low water availability curbs economic development in agriculture, which accounts for 86% of freshwater consumption. The analysis of the current situation of wastewater treatment, irrigation, and water management in MACs and of the research projects targeted to these countries indicates the need for 1) an enhanced capacity to analyze water stress, 2) the development of water management strategies capable of including wastewater reuse, and 3) development of locally adapted water treatment and irrigation technologies. This analysis shaped the MADFORWATER project (www.madforwater.eu), whose goal is to develop a set of integrated technological and management solutions to enhance wastewater treatment, wastewater reuse for irrigation, and water efficiency in agriculture in Egypt, Morocco, and Tunisia. MADFORWATER develops and adapts technologies for the production of irrigation-quality water from drainage canals and municipal, agro-industrial, and industrial wastewaters and technologies for water efficiency and reuse in agriculture, initially validated at laboratory scale, to 3 hydrological basins in the selected MACs. Selected technologies will be further adapted and validated in 4 demonstration plants of integrated wastewater treatment and reuse. Integrated strategies for wastewater treatment and reuse targeted to the selected basins are developed, and guidelines for the development of integrated water management strategies in other basins of the 3 target MACs will be produced. The social and technical suitability of the developed technologies and nontechnological tools in relation to the local context is evaluated with the participation of MAC stakeholders and partners. Guidelines on economic instruments and policies for the effective implementation of the proposed water management solutions in the target MACs will be developed. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2018;14:447–462. © 2018 The Authors. Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Society of Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry (SETAC). Presented on
- Published
- 2018
22. Arterial pulse wave modeling and analysis for vascular-age studies: a review from VascAgeNet.
- Author
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Alastruey J, Charlton PH, Bikia V, Paliakaite B, Hametner B, Bruno RM, Mulder MP, Vennin S, Piskin S, Khir AW, Guala A, Mayer CC, Mynard J, Hughes AD, Segers P, and Westerhof BE
- Subjects
- Humans, Pulse Wave Analysis, Models, Cardiovascular, Arteries physiology, Photoplethysmography methods
- Abstract
Arterial pulse waves (PWs) such as blood pressure and photoplethysmogram (PPG) signals contain a wealth of information on the cardiovascular (CV) system that can be exploited to assess vascular age and identify individuals at elevated CV risk. We review the possibilities, limitations, complementarity, and differences of reduced-order, biophysical models of arterial PW propagation, as well as theoretical and empirical methods for analyzing PW signals and extracting clinically relevant information for vascular age assessment. We provide detailed mathematical derivations of these models and theoretical methods, showing how they are related to each other. Finally, we outline directions for future research to realize the potential of modeling and analysis of PW signals for accurate assessment of vascular age in both the clinic and in daily life.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Caregiver-mediated exercises for improving outcomes after stroke.
- Author
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Vloothuis JD, Mulder M, Veerbeek JM, Konijnenbelt M, Visser-Meily JM, Ket JC, Kwakkel G, and van Wegen EE
- Subjects
- Activities of Daily Living, Adult, Humans, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Walking, Caregivers, Exercise Therapy methods, Postural Balance, Quality of Life, Stroke Rehabilitation methods
- Abstract
Background: Stroke is a major cause of long-term disability in adults. Several systematic reviews have shown that a higher intensity of training can lead to better functional outcomes after stroke. Currently, the resources in inpatient settings are not always sufficient and innovative methods are necessary to meet these recommendations without increasing healthcare costs. A resource efficient method to augment intensity of training could be to involve caregivers in exercise training. A caregiver-mediated exercise programme has the potential to improve outcomes in terms of body function, activities, and participation in people with stroke. In addition, caregivers are more actively involved in the rehabilitation process, which may increase feelings of empowerment with reduced levels of caregiver burden and could facilitate the transition from rehabilitation facility (in hospital, rehabilitation centre, or nursing home) to home setting. As a consequence, length of stay might be reduced and early supported discharge could be enhanced., Objectives: To determine if caregiver-mediated exercises (CME) improve functional ability and health-related quality of life in people with stroke, and to determine the effect on caregiver burden., Search Methods: We searched the Cochrane Stroke Group Trials Register (October 2015), CENTRAL (the Cochrane Library, 2015, Issue 10), MEDLINE (1946 to October 2015), Embase (1980 to December 2015), CINAHL (1982 to December 2015), SPORTDiscus (1985 to December 2015), three additional databases (two in October 2015, one in December 2015), and six additional trial registers (October 2015). We also screened reference lists of relevant publications and contacted authors in the field., Selection Criteria: Randomised controlled trials comparing CME to usual care, no intervention, or another intervention as long as it was not caregiver-mediated, aimed at improving motor function in people who have had a stroke., Data Collection and Analysis: Two review authors independently selected trials. One review author extracted data, and assessed quality and risk of bias, and a second review author cross-checked these data and assessed quality. We determined the quality of the evidence using GRADE. The small number of included studies limited the pre-planned analyses., Main Results: We included nine trials about CME, of which six trials with 333 patient-caregiver couples were included in the meta-analysis. The small number of studies, participants, and a variety of outcome measures rendered summarising and combining of data in meta-analysis difficult. In addition, in some studies, CME was the only intervention (CME-core), whereas in other studies, caregivers provided another, existing intervention, such as constraint-induced movement therapy. For trials in the latter category, it was difficult to separate the effects of CME from the effects of the other intervention.We found no significant effect of CME on basic ADL when pooling all trial data post intervention (4 studies; standardised mean difference (SMD) 0.21, 95% confidence interval (CI) -0.02 to 0.44; P = 0.07; moderate-quality evidence) or at follow-up (2 studies; mean difference (MD) 2.69, 95% CI -8.18 to 13.55; P = 0.63; low-quality evidence). In addition, we found no significant effects of CME on extended ADL at post intervention (two studies; SMD 0.07, 95% CI -0.21 to 0.35; P = 0.64; low-quality evidence) or at follow-up (2 studies; SMD 0.11, 95% CI -0.17 to 0.39; P = 0.45; low-quality evidence).Caregiver burden did not increase at the end of the intervention (2 studies; SMD -0.04, 95% CI -0.45 to 0.37; P = 0.86; moderate-quality evidence) or at follow-up (1 study; MD 0.60, 95% CI -0.71 to 1.91; P = 0.37; very low-quality evidence).At the end of intervention, CME significantly improved the secondary outcomes of standing balance (3 studies; SMD 0.53, 95% CI 0.19 to 0.87; P = 0.002; low-quality evidence) and quality of life (1 study; physical functioning: MD 12.40, 95% CI 1.67 to 23.13; P = 0.02; mobility: MD 18.20, 95% CI 7.54 to 28.86; P = 0.0008; general recovery: MD 15.10, 95% CI 8.44 to 21.76; P < 0.00001; very low-quality evidence). At follow-up, we found a significant effect in favour of CME for Six-Minute Walking Test distance (1 study; MD 109.50 m, 95% CI 17.12 to 201.88; P = 0.02; very low-quality evidence). We also found a significant effect in favour of the control group at the end of intervention, regarding performance time on the Wolf Motor Function test (2 studies; MD -1.72, 95% CI -2.23 to -1.21; P < 0.00001; low-quality evidence). We found no significant effects for the other secondary outcomes (i.e., Patient: motor impairment, upper limb function, mood, fatigue, length of stay and adverse events; caregiver: mood and quality of life).In contrast to the primary analysis, sensitivity analysis of CME-core showed a significant effect of CME on basic ADL post intervention (2 studies; MD 9.45, 95% CI 2.11 to 16.78; P = 0.01; moderate-quality evidence).The methodological quality of the included trials and variability in interventions (e.g. content, timing, and duration), affected the validity and generalisability of these observed results., Authors' Conclusions: There is very low- to moderate-quality evidence that CME may be a valuable intervention to augment the pallet of therapeutic options for stroke rehabilitation. Included studies were small, heterogeneous, and some trials had an unclear or high risk of bias. Future high-quality research should determine whether CME interventions are (cost-)effective.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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